"A look at Mirella Bentivoglio's works at the Â鶹´«Ã½ Museum of Art," by Valerio Viale, L'Italo-Americano
Mirella Bentivoglio, visual artist and poetess, was born in Klagenfurt, Austria, in 1922 to Italian parents: Margherita Cavalli and the scientist, Ernesto Bertarelli. She spent her childhood in Milan and, then, she moved to study in the German-speaking part of Switzerland and in England, before the WWII burst out.
At that point, she resumed her education, through her father’s extensive book collection. To better understand her later artistic choices, I quote Mirella’s own words: “My mother was always a bit jealous of my father's books, and by extension, of my relationship with him. She wanted me to paint, whereas my father encouraged my reading and writing. I hope that through the creation of artists' books and works of visual and concrete poetry, combining image and language, I have finally made peace between them.â€
At 21 years of age, Mirella published her first collection of poetry: Giardino (1943). However, she gradually felt restrained by the rigidity of the printed words and, in the 60s, she joined the Concrete poetry movement, which shifts its focus from the meaning and content of a text to its constitutive elements (alphabetic letters, phonemes, syllables and words).
Later, Bentivoglio joined the Visual poetry movement, which blurs the distinction between art and text in a more radical way.
The artist, in her long career, has been recognized both domestically and internationally: in 2002, she was awarded the Silver Plate of the President of the Italian Republic; 65 solo exhibitions have been dedicated to her worldwide; she has taken part to the Venice Biennale (eight times from 1969 to 2001) and the MOMA - Museum of Modern Art (New York, 1992), just to name a few.
The current exhibition, PAGES: Mirella Bentivoglio, Selected Works 1966 – 2012, on view from January 20 to May 17, at the Â鶹´«Ã½ Museum of Art, celebrates her most experimental and provocative works.